USPS To Provide Personal Identity Certification
Zentalon writes "The United States Postal Service has announced that it will provide In-Person Proofing (pdf) to physically authenticate individuals before a digital signature certificate is issued to that person. This has a bunch of interesting ramifications; for instance, I could create a simple spam filter that only accepts mail from individuals and organizations that have an authenticated certificate. It could also allow for more secure financial transactions. Anyone know if any other national postal services are planning the same thing?" Funny, they don't seem to always know where to deliver so-called first-class mail ...
Shortly after digital signatures became legally equivalent to regular signatures in Germany, Deutsche Post (the German postal service) offered digital authentication. Last time I heard about it, it was being scrapped due to a lack of demand.
"Light is faster than sound." - "Is that why people tend to look bright until you hear them speak?"
Other than that, I'm sure it'll be great. When will my local branch (literally in a small town in Nebraska) have their PKI training day?
Dewey, what part of this looks like authorities should be involved?
Sounds like an opourtunity to charge us. This seems a lot like the door opening for the postal service's charging to send emails. Why else would they be offering to develop this amazing technology? To make our lives better?
future shocked
Is this how they are going to roll out a national database system? Saying it will help in the fight against spam and forgery? Not that I'm "totally" against such a system, but it seems like they are misrepresenting the true nature of this.
what good is a digital signature verified by the Post Office if you are unable to.......... speak?
Mike.
Mmmm......sacrelicious.
Just a comment about the "Funny, they don't seem to always know where to deliver so-called first-class mail ..." remark.
Have I had mail lost? Yes. Is it annoying? Yes.
But, think about how amazing it is about what the USPS does right. It moves billions of pieces of mail every day, and almost all of it (percentage wise) gets to where it should be going in spite of the fact that not every piece of mail can be automatically routed and multiple people end up looking at it at one point or another. And, in spite of the price increases, I can still send a letter anywhere in the US for 37c and it'll usually get there within a 2-3 days.
Sure, dealling with the post office is a pain occasionally, and they do lose some mail. But, when I think about the scope and scale of what they do right, it does boggle my mind.
They'd already sort of be competing with Verisign and other certificate authorities that use various ways to verify your identity. I don't know what is worse, dealing with Verisign or dealing with the USPS.
I dunno, while this seems like a great idea on the surface, I am a little leery about going and getting "proofed" for this digital signature. Having not read the article, it seems like just one more database entry on me to be cross-referenced so that I can be "accurately" profiled by the government or whatever other really large entity decides they want to. I'll stick to my GPG signature, thanks. But then again, maybe my foil hat needs to be adjusted....
What's important is that the PDF is unique. Once it becomes clear that a PDF is associated with a spammer, the PDF will become useless, no matter who it claims to belong to.
This sounds potentially like a great method to prevent spam or at least to allow verified mail, but it still doesn't sound like a complete solution. One of the distinguishing characteristics of the Internet is that it allows people anonymity. If only emails with digital signatures are allowed then anonymous email won't get through. On the other hand, if verified email were possible, it would prevent false positives for spam and Bayesian filters could handle the rest of email. This way emails wouldn't be falsely designated as spam and everything would get through.
I hear ya there.
The USPS could learn a thing or two about accuracy and error-prevention from Slashdot.
fnord
Obliteracy: Words with explosions
I recieved my official danish digital certificate(x.v509) by getting two pin codes. One via snail mail and the other when I ordered the certificate via the web. Both had to be typed in to recieve the certificate via mail.
Seems pretty secure to me.
The only thing it works for so far is tax stuff, and mail.
still reading?
The USPS' idea for certified proofing for digital signatures is in the right direction for securing financial transactions, helping to prevent spam (in the case of accepting emails only e-signed from registered people), but initiating such a project will bring the US closer to a National ID card.
/required/ to register with the USPS in order to take advantage of the online filings with the IRS. Sure, but what if people just file in paper? Without a doubt, the government will then ad a fee to paper filings to encourage taxpapers (everyone) to register with the USPS service.
By attaching services such as online tax refunds or filings, the public will be
Let me see your papers, please!
2.1 Eligibility For a Certificate Authority (CA) to use IPP, the CA must incorporate the U.S. Postal Service In-Person Proofing Policy into their Certificate Policy. Conformance to the Postal policy includes: 1. Use of a Patriot Act compliant database vetting process to gain initial assurance of an applicant's identity before sending the applicant to the Postal Office for IPP.
Yay, more data to shove into the Patriot Act machine. What a bargin!
I saw this in Bulgaria. Few online banking sites require use of digital certificates and username/password. You have to go in person to one of the bank branches before you can get a digital certificate. Once having the certificate one can do a lot of things that we can;t here in US - online transfers, forex, etc
Agent: (slowly) May I help you?
User: I'd like to get a certified digital ID.
Agent: (slowly) Okay, please go to the back of the room and fill out form 2219. When you're done, please bring it back to the front.
User searches a while
User: Where's the form?!
Agent: (slowly) If it's not there, we're out. You can always call 1-800-ASK-USPS for more information.
User: But they told me to come here! You have to verify my ID!
Agent: (very slowly) I'm sorry, you'll have to speak to the manager. He's gone for the day. You'll have to come back Monday at 10 am.
User: AAAAIIIEEEEEEE!!!!! runs screaming from the post office
Yeah, this will be a big hit.
Definitely Verisign. The USPS doesn't think it's funny when they accidentally release your property to someone else (see also: sex.com). In fact, rumor has it that having the Postal Inspectors storm your house is not as funny as it sounds (i.e., 30 guys in attack armor carrying assault rifles vs. 5 guys like Cliff from "Cheers").
Dewey, what part of this looks like authorities should be involved?
35922 Federal Register / Vol. 68, No. 116 / Tuesday, June 17, 2003 / Notices
Dated: June 12, 2003.
D. L. Gamberoni,
Technical Coordinator, Office of the Secretary.
[FR Doc. 03Ð 15347 Filed 6Ð 13Ð 03; 11: 53 am]
BILLING CODE 7590 01 M
POSTAL SERVICE
In-Person Proofing at Post Offices (IPP) Program
AGENCY: U. S. Postal Service.
ACTION: Notice.
SUMMARY: The USPS is announcing the
availability of an In-Person Proofing at Post Offices (IPP) Program to support
the activities of U. S. Certificate Authorities and government
organizations.
EFFECTIVE DATE: June 9, 2003.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Chuck Chamberlain at 703Ð 292Ð 4172, or Brad Reck at 703Ð 292Ð 3530
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: In recent years, a number of new federal statutes have sought to preserve the ability of the public and private sectors to use the efficiency of the internet to rapidly exchange time sensitive communications while assuring that
people receiving and sending messages are in fact who they say they are. A
number of top quality private sector businesses have mastered the
technology around the use of secure digital signatures, yielding a greater
demand for improved identity verification for individuals seeking to
use digital signatures. This need for improved '' online
identity'' creates a unique service opportunity for the Postal Service to
provide value to the public, leverage our retail network and enable internet
communications to enjoy a new level of security and reliability. Numerous
organizations have approached the U. S. Postal Service to conduct In-Person
Proofing (IPP) of customers nationwide for physically authenticating an
individual's identification at a post office before the organization issues a
digital signature certificate to the individual.
IPP supports efficient, affordable, trusted communications through the use
of identification verification at Post Offices, incorporation of process
enhancements required by the Postal Service, active management of the IPP
program by the USPS, and use of a First Class U. S. Mail piece to verify physical
addresses of applicants. We believe that IPP conducted at local post offices will
create a new broad based capability for the Nation that promotes improved public trust and greater efficiency in the
electronic delivery of a wide range of services. These efforts support achieving
the goals of the Government Paperwork Elimination Act of 1998, Electronic
Signature in Global and National Commerce Act of 2000, Health
Insurance Portability and Accountability Act of 1996, Sarbanes-Oxley
Act of 2002, and Gramm-Leach-Bliley Act of 1999 and numerous
Presidential Directives on eGovernment. The following is a brief description of
how IPP would work. An organization can establish a relationship with a
qualified U. S. Certificate Authority to integrate digital signing with improved
identity verification into an online application. Any individual desiring to
use digital certificates that include USPS IPP will complete an application
online. The online system will verify the individual's identity via commercial
data base checking. The system will then produce a standard Postal Service
form to be printed out at the '' applicant's'' personal computer. The
individual requesting the service will present this form to a participating post
office where the '' In Person Proofing'' process is conducted. After successful
completion of the IPP event, the CA will notify the applicant to download their
digital certificate. For clarity, the steps in the IPP process are outlined below.
1.0 DESCRIPTION
1.1 Purpose
IPP is a postal program to improve the public key infrastructure of the Nation.
The public key infrastructure has emerged as an accepted infrastructure
component for protecting and facilitating the electronic
communications of the Nation.
2.0 BASIC STANDARDS
2.1 Eligib
Bush is on fire and its not good for my lungs.
I am concerned that what begins as a voluntary initiative will one day become quasi-mandatory, like carrying a driver's license.
-ccm
Too much Law; not enough Order.
I swear on my grandmother grave that I saw "In-Person Shooting" when I first read it.
A few less FPS games for me, I think. More Super Mario Sunshine and Animal Crossing for a while.
Well, I have a 5-day weekend ahead of me. You all play nice.
--- Ban humanity.
So the digital certificate could be used to validate the mail I sent really came from me? Oh, I'd just attach the certificate to the email? Oh, there's a central repository where all the email addresses I might use can be linked to the certificate? Oh, how lovely... and who would this repository be available to? Only the government? Oh grand. Sign me up!
This is just what I've been looking for!
(start playing the sad story music, if you have any - Michael Jackson stuff will work real well here)
You see, I've had sort of an identity crisis - not really sure who I am. The post office can finally change that. They can authenticate me, and authenticate who I am. No more wandering willy-nilly.
(at this point please begin playing some patriotic music to get the full effect of the message)
With the post office as my guide, I will rise to the brink of a better tomorrow and boldly go forth to face my dreams because I am authenticated!
Thankyou, US post office. The world is in your debt.
Mod me down and I will become more powerful than you can possibly imagine!
1) How well will this work with other authtication techniques? (ie. if other postal systems start this, will there be interoperability? If so, who coordinates this?)
2) How good is the procedure to replace a lost/stolen certificate?
3) What good is this for people not in the US?
4) If someone lives in the US, gets one of these, and then moves, can it still be updated/replaced?
5) I forget the other question.
Granted, I only skimmed the article, so I may have missed the answers, but still....
Now, if that makes sense to anyone, could you please explain it to me? I think I've confused myself.
Comment removed based on user account deletion
Not all email that doesn't originate in the USA is spam. Using this as a spam filter would balkanize Internet email and make it "domestic USA mail only" for US residents, and available internationally only for those who live elsewhere.
If you're a zombie and you know it, bite your friend!
Great. Just great. Now I get to deal with the Post Office and Verisign when I want to lock down an SSL site.
Please shoot me.
Dewey, what part of this looks like authorities should be involved?
I hate X.509. It's cumbersome and weird (that extra 'cert request' step), while also being functionally lame (only one signature, and you have to either completely trust it or not). Why anyone would want to use that when there's something so much better available (OpenPGP), is beyond me.
As copyright owner of this comment, I authorize everyone to defeat any technological measure which limits access to it.
Actually a division of the US DOD? Bullshit. From the USPS web site:
United States Postal Service
The Post Office Department was transformed into the United States Postal Service, an independent establishment of the executive branch of the Government of the United States. The mission of the Postal Service remained the same, as stated in Title 39 of the U.S. Code: "The Postal Service shall have as its basic function the obligation to provide postal services to bind the Nation together through the personal, educational, literary, and business correspondence of the people. It shall provide prompt, reliable, and efficient services to patrons in all areas and shall render postal services to all communities."
The new Postal Service officially began operations on July 1, 1971. At that time, the Postmaster General left the Cabinet, and the Postal Service received:
* Operational authority vested in a Board of Governors and Postal Service executive management, rather than in Congress.
* Authority to issue public bonds to finance postal buildings and mechanization.
* Direct collective bargaining between representatives of management and the unions.
* A new rate-setting procedure, built around an independent Postal Rate Commission.
Title 39, the Postal Reorganization Act, also vested direction of the powers of the Postal Service in an 11-member Board of Governors. Nine members (the Governors) are appointed by the President, by and with the advice and consent of the Senate. They serve staggered nine-year terms, and no more than five Governors may belong to the same political party. Governors are chosen to represent the public interest generally, may not represent specific interests using the Postal Service, and may be removed only for cause.
Complaints will be handled by people too slow to work at the Department of Motor Vehicles.
I repeat the following story every time I hear someone insult a postal worker.
One day I needed to get something in the mail THAT day, and I wasn't able to get down to the post office. I caught the mailman as he was driving up to the mailbox, and handed him the letter. Except I didn't have enough postage- I had forgotten about the rate increase that had happened recently.
Now, if the guy had wanted to be an asshole, he could have refused it- but he said "you got any change? I'll put the extra postage on it when I get in" I had a quarter on me, gave it to him, and was happy that I had probably still spent less money than the gas it would have taken to get to the post office and back.
What bowled me over was that the next day, he parked, came to the door, and handed me change. I was blown away that he bothered for such a small amount, and had expected him to (rightfully, far as I was concerned) pocket the 15-20 cents for the trouble of having to 'buy' and slap on an extra stamp for me.
NOW, if you want to see how patient postal employees are, see what these guys did. It is incredibly funny(the part about the sender trying to argue they should get money BACK for shipping a balloon is hilarious), but there's a serious message in their absurd little experiment(which involved shipping bricks, hammers, dead fish+seaweed, etc), and I'll include their conclusion here:
First, this experiment yielded a 64% delivery rate (18/28), an almost two-thirds success rate. (For our purposes, "delivery" constituted some type of independent handling by the USPS and subsequent contact regarding the object, regardless of whether we got to see or keep the object or whether it arrived whole.) This is astounding, considering the nature of some of the items sent. This compares with a 0% rate of receipt of fully wrapped packages from certain countries of the developing world, such as Peru, Turkey, and Egypt. Admittedly, those were international mailings, and thus not totally comparable; nevertheless, the disparity is striking.
Second, the delivery involved the collusion of sequences of postal workers, not simply lone operatives. The USPS appears to have some collective sense of humor, and might in fact here be displaying the rudiments of organic bureaucratic intelligence.
Finally, our investigation team felt remorse for some of its experimental efforts, most particularly the category "Disgusting," after the good faith of the USPS in its delivery efforts. We sought out as many of the USPS employees who had (involuntarily) been involved in the experiment as we could identify, and gave them each a small box of chocolate.
We, and all scientists, owe a debt of gratitude to these civil servants. Without them, we would have had but little success in pushing the envelope.
Please help metamoderate.
Australia Post was looking at providing this service for it's "Gatekeeper" x.509 platform. It is also known as "RA" (registry Authority), and considering that Australia Post is already the "RA" for our passport applications - they would probably be the best suited too.
I don't think that X.509 has been "widely accepted by the community" yet... so I can't find any more details about it..
"Sorry, this AK47 is not registered to this user. Please call the Kalashnikov Corporation customer service hotline at 1-800-COMMUNISM and have a credit card ready..."
As copyright owner of this comment, I authorize everyone to defeat any technological measure which limits access to it.
Market droid talk. If they are so good why does the post office need to get into it? Other talk about "demand", "unique service opportunity" and trusted computing has my back up. It's all so Microsoft sounding. But that's just the beginning.
They are going to use "comercial database checking", and the databases must be "Patriot Act Compliant". While the commmercial database check looks like coroprate welfare, it the Patriot act part looks like a land grab. What, besides any old G-man clerk having the athority to look at all of your data, constitues Patriot Act Complience?
The authentication method is first class mail. and a file that dissapears in four years. I'm not going to think very hard about all the ways to defruad the post and defeat this system, but mail fraud is still a common problem. The dissapering file is the real clincher. What "top quality private sector bussines" has a patent on DRM OS and has been touting files that expire as a means to "trusted computing"?
Having a certificate athority is good. Using that need as a means to nationalize software, usurp private databases, funnel tax money into private hands and foce everyone to use propriatory software is not good. The system needs to be run on proven free and open standards in a non-revocable manner.
The USPO is going to have to do better than that to win my trust. I've got one Microsoft machine for talking to an old camera and a scanner. I don't let it see the internet because it's so easy to break and own. Any plan that would force me to use software I don't trust for ecommerce is a plan I don't trust or want.
Two years ago, some moron told me that the US government would make it illegal to run anything but Microsoft software. He actually thought this was a good idea and was convinced it would happen. I told him that would violate the first amendment rights to free speech, and effectivly nationalize general purpose computing and such laws were laughably unAmerican. I'm not laughing anymore.
Someone tell me I'm just paranoid, please.
Friends don't help friends install M$ junk.
My grandfather used to deliver mail back in the 60s or something, and my parents told me that at the time, you did NOT fuck with the Post Office. Don't know if that's more or less true nowdays, although the PR about it doesn't seem as good anymore.
This Space Intentionally Left Blank
I was actually one of the developers of this project (three years ago), and it is funny to see that they are finally "announcing" it.
The idea is simple, and it is actually a useful service that the USPS has the resources to provide, if they actually go through with it. Whereas SSL only authenticates the server (among other things, of course), the allocations for client authentication in SSL are optional and very rarely used. All the client needs for this is its own digital certificate, just like the server has its certificate.
So, to get an SSL certificate, we (whether we like it or not) trust the various CAs to make certain that they are granted to the rightful owners. When it comes to client certificates, the scope of the problem becomes much larger, because you are authenticating people rather than domains. If you fail to properly identify someone before issuing the digital certificate, the point is lost.
The USPS has post offices all over the US (their only country of concern in this case), and this fact provides the perfect platform for authenticating people. Just as with Passports, you must prove your identity in person before being authenticated.
How do the pieces fit together? Well, it is fairly simple, but it involves a lot of existing systems, some of which are aging. You register online (providing much personal information, including what forms of ID you will be bringing with you). This generates a letter that is sent to your address (verifying your address in the process). You take this letter to the post office, and if you pass the in-person proofing, the clerk scans the barcode on the letter. This scan makes its way back to the system in about 24 hours, and then your digital certificate is generated. An email is sent to let you know, and you can then download it from the Web site after logging in.
At any rate, I still think the general idea is a good one, and this would be a useful service for a lot of people. I hope it is successful.
"Funny, they don't seem to always know where to deliver so-called first-class mail ..."
No, not very funny. Rather clueless. Did you know that the USPS has domestic airlines carrying mail?
I can't even count the times I've found stray (or lost) bags of mail in aircraft. One of my many job functions when I worked for a ground handling company was to make sure that mail for Anchorage actually got *on the right aircraft* and didn't wind up on a flight to Miami. We'd actually check behind the belly toolbox on that old nasty DC-8 looking for mail bags.
Ever seen a 55' truck back up to a DC-6? Yes, folks. Bulk loading 33,000lbs of mail into a friggin DC-6 bound for northern Alaska.
Sure, mail gets lost sometimes, but it's not always the fault of the USPS.
Yeah?
Get FedEx to pick up a letter in White's City, NM and deliver it to Buttfuck Alaska in less than a week for 40 cents.
Ask UPS to deliver some RAM from your home in the middle of nowhere in Vermont to suburban Seattle in two days flat for $3.85.
that slashdot would slam the USPS for its incredibly rare mistakes?
/. ran the postoffice, my mail would only get handled correctly about 4 out of 10 times. the good noes is, I would regularly get the same package twice.
If the people who ran
The Kruger Dunning explains most post on
Besides, $
This isn't as much "normalization" as it is "don't take so many drugs when you're designing tables."
http://www.smartid.gov.hk/en/index.html
p e/ smartid/index.html
and so does Hong Kong Post.
http://www.hongkongpost.gov.hk/product/ecert/ty
the last (several) times i have moved, I've gone down to the post office, picked up an official postal change of address form, filled it out and mailed it back in.
as far as i can tell (and the USPS may have updated their policy since the last time i moved) there's no ID, or any kind of proof of identity for that matter, involved in filling out a change of address form. that, and no confirmation after the fact that it had been accepted and processed - other than your mail showing up at the new address with a big yellow sticker over the address. i.e. nothing to prevent someone filling out a form for somebody else
in fact, i read several years ago in a book of "dirty tricks and practical jokes" that a fun little prank to pull on someone you don't like was to fill out a change of address form for them - forwarding their mail to an address in another state. another fun one was to send a threatening letter to 1600 pennsylvania ave with their return address. postal inspectors *and* secret service when the prez is in town. fun for the whole family!
now, tell me they've updated this procedure - which used to be done with a simple mail-in form - or else tell me how i'm supposed to trust this same organization as an authority regarding someone's identity.
- Entertaining Bits from the Ancient Kernel Tree
Delivery of a two-pound, 20"x15"x2" package from California to London:
UPS: $66 (2-5 days)
FedEx: $65 (4-5 days)
USPS: $15 (4-6 days)
You can guess who I went with. It took four days to get there.
You can never go home again... but I guess you can shop there.
I'm curious when we may have access to a government approved digital time-stamping service?
Ever like to prove to somebody that a document existed at a certain date? "Mail it to yourself. It's got the postmark."
Well, besides the fact that this ploy would never stand up in court (it's too easy to steam the flap open), it's a good idea.
How about the USPS providing a digital document time-stamping service? What good time-stamps are availible out there that would stand a test at the patent office, for example???
If we can't screen out millions of illegal aliens who manage to come to the U.S. and present documents that are good enough to let them satisfy the government's requirements to prove to an employer that they are eligible to work in the U.S., how is this going to be better? If the answer is "better documents," how come we aren't requiring those better documents to be presented to the employers?
After reading the article (quickly) I still have some questions:
1) What kind of certificate is being given? X.509?
2) What private information is kept by the user to be used to encrypt or sign data? In PGP you have a key that's usually thousands of bits long. I just read that X.509 certificates only use a password. If this is true, wouldn't it be a lot easier to crack? For example, by encrypting data with tiny passwords until a browser or e-mail program accepts it?
3) How is the private info given to the user? If it's in person when the user signs up, then it has to be randomly generated since no one at the office should see it. If it's sent in the e-mail notice for downloading the certificate, that can't be secure can it? So it must be given at sign-up in a sealed envelope right?
Hong Kong Post office is teaming up with the government to offer the same thing, this has been available for over a year now. Refer to this link.
The Hong Kong Government has recently roll out a renew plan for all citizens to renew their ID card (mandatory, must be on the person at all times). This new ID card is a smart card which also allow storage of digital cert.
Because of this mandatory ID, the cert roll out plan (storage and distribution) is relatively easier than other countries.
I didn't have to look far to see the usual "postal service sucks" stuff. Heck, even the poster (as opposed to the submitter) couldn't resist offering a little jab.
These people obviously don't know what it's like outside the United States. yes, I live in the US and I was born here, but I have been around enough to know that the US is where I belong. And the USPS is a great example of why it's so great to live in America. As big as the country is, 2-3 days is usually enough to get mail from anywhere to anwhere (Continental US, of course). I mail things with absolutely no fear of anything getting lost, and I have never known of any situation where something was legitimately lost in the mail.
It's always been an excuse, and a useful one for certain people, since it's impossible to disprove (can't that a letter than can't be found and that wasn't tracked was ever sent). Anyway, I'm sure some people have had trouble with the postal service, and we've all had run-ins with specific postal workers who don't care about their jobs (just like at McDonald's and Kmart and every government office).
The only negative experience I ever had with the actual service was a long time ago... like 15 years or so. A letter had been accidentally "mutilated" on the way to my mailbox. That was their word, not mine. It had obviously gotten caught in some sort of machine and it was useable and readable. But it came sealed in a special plastic covering with an amazingly-apologetic statement, just going on and on about how much of a disappointment and an inconvenience they had been to me. I couldn't believe it.
Ok, I'm done ranting. Continue slamming the postal service all you want. Oh, and by the way, I think this is a good idea. This is an organization that has a high degree of trust and is available for everybody in the US to easily to the in-person visit. Brilliant.
RP